Energy Secretary Rick Perry did a remarkable thing a few weeks ago: he expressed skepticism about the causes of climate change in a TV interview, and even after widespread condemnation from environmentalists and the press, he did it again a few days later before a major Senate committee.
After telling a CNBC host on June 19 that he did not believe that carbon dioxide is the primary “control knob” for climate, Perry said, “this idea that science [of climate change] is just absolutely settled and if you don’t believe it’s settled then you’re somehow another Neanderthal, that is so inappropriate from my perspective. I think if you’re going to be a wise, intellectually-engaged person, being a skeptic about some of these issues is quite alright.”
Climate activists and many media were outraged. The Houston Chronicle reported, “Perry’s comments drew attacks from environmental groups, which called the former Texas governor a ‘climate denier.'”
“Rick Perry’s outrageous comments are the latest indication that this administration will do everything in its power to put polluter profits ahead of science and public health,” said Sierra Club Climate Policy director, Liz Perera.
Labeling Perry’s comments “anti-science,” Mashable, a prominent online media company, headlined their coverage, “Rick Perry just said CO2 isn’t the leading driver of climate change, even though it is.”
On and on went the attacks from Associated Press, Salon magazine, Toronto Star, Market Watch, and more. Media outlets that reported uncritically on Perry’s comments were few and far between.
The American Meteorological Society even sent an open letter to the secretary, warning him, “it is critically important that you understand that emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases are the primary cause [of recent global warming] … Skepticism that fails to account for evidence is no virtue.”
Most politicians would have responded to the onslaught by quickly issuing a mea culpa press release, pledging allegiance to political correctness, but not Perry. Only three days later, in response to intense questioning by Sen. Al Franken, D-Minn., at the Senate Energy & Natural Resources Committee hearing about President Trump’s 2018 energy department budget request, Perry asked, “don’t you think it’s OK to have this conversation about the science of climate change … What’s wrong with being a skeptic about something that we’re talking about that’s going to have a massive impact on the American economy?”
Perry’s points about climate change, in both the TV interview and his Senate testimony, are justified. Being a skeptic about such a complex and uncertain field, especially one with expensive policy ramifications, is indeed “quite alright.” Besides being necessary for science to advance, skepticism is the duty of our elected officials when activists demand the allocation of vast sums of public money to contentious causes.
Dozens of open letters and other public lists show that many experts do not support the hypothesis that we face a man-made climate crisis. Dr. Tim Ball, an environmental consultant and former climatology professor at the University of Winnipeg in Manitoba, responded to the AMS letter: “These are completely false statements. The only evidence in support of CO2 as the primary cause of global warming are the outputs of the computer models used by the U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which has been wrong in every forecast or scenario they produced since 1990. If your forecast is wrong then your science is wrong.”
Read more at Superior Telegram
Theory, hypothesis, experiment
are the essence of science.
Speculation and skepticism are necessary
to make scientific evaluation
POSSIBLE.
Those who close off inquiry
are not just unscientific,
THEY ARE LYING POLITICIANS
pretending to be
Scientists.
Rick Perry is absolutely correct and is simply stating the obvious .
The Sierra club should welcome open discussion . What are they afraid of . The truth differs from the hype ?
Skepticism, conversation, and debate are at the core of any real science. Anyone who would tell us otherwise is no friend of science whatsoever. Sonnyhill put it very well here, stating that the left has “mortgaged science” with the climate change agenda, inappropriately borrowing on the reputations of the many good scientists who have made the profession respectable.
The big trouble is that the eco-nazis the Watermelons(Green on outside Red Inside)want to silence Global Warming/Climate Change skeptics becuase were getting in the way of their poltical agendas and the bank acconts